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Alcaraz reveals top form as he regains Queen's crown

Alcaraz reveals top form as he regains Queen's crown

Qatar Tribune14 hours ago

PA Media/DPA
London
Carlos Alcaraz looks in top form for Wimbledon after regaining his crown as the King of Queen's by beating Jiri Lehecka in an absorbing final
on Sunday.
The Spanish top seed replicated his debut triumph on the grass courts of west London in 2023 with a 7-5, 6-7 (5-7), 6-2 victory.
It was an 18th-straight win for Alcaraz - in his fifth consecutive final - following his title successes in Rome and at the French Open.
World number 30 Lehecka had knocked out home hope Jack Draper on Saturday to become the first Czech finalist since Ivan Lendl won the Queen's title in 1990.
The 23-year-old played his part in a high-quality final with some huge serves and powerful groundstrokes, forcing the match to a decider via a tie-break.
But Alcaraz, the defending Wimbledon champion, did not face a single break point and slammed down 18 aces on his way to a 21st career title.
In a way, proving he will be the man to beat at the grass Wimbledon grand slam from June 30.
'It's really special, this trophy and this tournament. I'm happy to lift this trophy once again,' he said.
'Jiri, you had an incredible week and it's a nightmare to play against you. Great week, great job and keep it up for Wimbledon.
'It has been an incredible week. I came without expectations and just wanted to play good tennis and to get used to the grass.'
Alcaraz got a first look at a break point at 2-2, but he barely saw a furious ace that snuffed it out.
At 4-5 the 22-year-old was in a spot of bother, serving at 0-30, but with a quick squeeze of the accelerator he reeled off eight of the next 10 points to hold and then grab the crucial break.
Alcaraz had dropped just 10 points on serve before the second-set tie-break but he suddenly dropped his guard, with an untimely double fault and a pair of Lehecka aces taking the match the distance.
But Lehecka dipped in the third with Alcaraz breaking for 3-1, and before long a flashing forehand brought up two championship points, the world number two taking the first and roaring with delight at a second Queen's title.

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